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Fullmetal Alchemist
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Everything about Fullmetal Alchemist totally explained


Cover characters:
  • Edward Elric
  • Alphonse Elric | Summary = }} Cover characters:
  • Edward Elric
  • Alphonse Elric | Summary = }} Cover characters:
  • Edward Elric
  • Alphonse Elric | Summary = }} Cover characters:
  • Edward Elric
  • Alphonse Elric
  • Roy Mustang | Summary = }} Cover characters:
  • Edward Elric
  • Alphonse Elric
  • Winry Rockbell | Summary = }}
    Novelizations of three of the PlayStation 2 games—Fullmetal Alchemist and the Broken Angel,, and —have also been written; the first was authored by Makoto Inoue and the rest by Jun Eishima. | OriginalISBN = 978-4-7575-1247-4 | VolumeExtras = Volume title:
  • Cover characters:
  • Edward Elric
  • Alphonse Elric
  • Armony Eiselstein }} Cover characters:
  • Edward Elric
  • Alphonse Elric }} Cover characters:
  • Edward Elric
  • Alphonse Elric
  • Sophie Belkman }}

    Drama CDs

    There has been two series of Fullmetal Alchemist audio dramas. The first volume of the first series,, was released before the anime and tells a story similar to the first novel. The voice actors of the Tringham brothers worked later in the anime with the same characters, while the Elric brothers have different voice actors. and are stories based on different manga chapters with the addition of other characters, such as Roy Mustang, Riza Hawkeye, Alex Louis Armstrong and Maes Hughes. Since then, six expansions have been released. Cards for this game were sold in booster packs and as decks The physical game was retired on July 11, 2007; Destineer released a Nintendo DS adaptation of the game on October 15, 2007.

    Art and guidebooks

    The Fullmetal Alchemist franchise has several artbooks for the manga and the anime; two manga artbooks called were released by Square Enix and later by Viz Media.. The first contains illustrations made between May 2001 to April 2003, spanning the first six manga volumes, while the second has illustrations from September 2003 to October 2005, spanning the next six. For the anime, three artbooks with the name of were released in Japan, while only the first was released by Viz Media.
       The manga also has three guidebooks; each of them contain timelines, guides to the Elric brothers' journey, and gaiden chapters that were never released in a manga volume. An anime character guide book called was released Japan as well in the United States. A DVD of the concert entitled Fullmetal Alchemist Festival - Tales of Another was released in Japan on April 27, 2005. Of the seven games made in Japan, Broken Angel, Dream Carnival, Curse of the Crimson Elixir, and Dual Sympathy have seen international release; the others have not been released internationally.
       Funimation licensed the franchise to create a new series of Fullmetal Alchemist related video games to be published by Destineer Publishing Corporation in the United States. Destineer released its first Fullmetal Alchemist game for the Nintendo DS, a translation of Bandai's, on December 15, 2006, and has commented that this will be the first of many titles that they plan to release. On February 19, 2007, Destineer announced the second game in its Fullmetal Alchemist series, the Fullmetal Alchemist Trading Card Game. This title was released October 15, 2007. Southern Island has also released their own action figures in 2007 of the main characters. These figures and a 12" statue were scheduled to release in 2007. Southern Island has since gone bankrupt, putting the figures on permanent hiatus.

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